Saturday, September 1, 2012

On Twitter, doubts over Putrajaya’s Merdeka record claim

On Twitter, doubts over Putrajaya’s Merdeka record claim

September 01, 2012

Malaysian Insider

A
screen capture from the Politweet Facebook page shows a series of
identical entries on Twitter that were registered during the record
attempt.

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 1 ― Putrajaya’s claim of setting a
record 3.6 million tweets in an hour during the country’s 55th
Independence Day celebration was met with disbelief by Malaysian Twitter
users, who accused the organiser of rigging the bid by using “bots” to
generate false publicity.

A screen capture shows a Twitter post made during the record attempt.

Malaysian
users of the micro-blogging service continued today to pour scorn over
Information, Communication and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Rais Yatim’s
record-beating claim.

Another user, Cyril Dason, tweeted on his account @cyrildason that
“#merdeka55 stats online: 1,500 tweets generated 493,610 impressions,
reaching an audience of 185,482 followers within the past 24 hours”, in
an apparent rebuttal of the federal government’s record-setting claim.

They were responding to Rais’ announcement last night that some
3,611,323 tweets were recorded between 8.15pm and 9.15pm nationwide to
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s account, @NajibRazak, containing
various independence-themed messages, during the “Janji Ditepati
(Promises Fulfilled)” gathering at Stadium Bukit Jalil.

Independent online research house PoliTweet.org,
which tracks social media use in Malaysian politics, had also noted the
use of “bots” to increase the number of tweets for the event.

A screen capture shows a Twitter post made during the record attempt.

It
observed that mentions of the official hashtag movement created for the
event, #Merdeka55, had been generated at an unusual rate estimated at
720 tweets a minute, leading it to conclude that the messages were
automated.

A check conducted by The Malaysian Insider also found new
accounts on Twitter bearing the #merdeka55 hashtag that contained
identical tweets posted at matching times. Some examples are available here, here, and here.

“Noticeable use of bots tweeting the exact same tweet at the exact same time, as seen in this screen-capture,” said PoliTweet.

“From 815-915pm we collected 107K tweets from 19K users. This
represents a by-the-minute sample of what was tweeted. 38% of tweets
came from 14% of the users, all of whom used TweetDeck,” it said on its
website. “That’s 41K tweets from 2761 users. These were the likely
spammers.”

The social media researcher compared the Malaysian phenomenon to
tweets over the ongoing Republican electoral campaign in the US.

A screen capture shows a Twitter post made during the record attempt.

It
noted that in the US Republican’s case, over half a million tweets had
been generated on its official hashtags movement ― #RNC #GOP2012 ― and
that tweets peaked at 3,306 tweets a minute yesterday at 11.04pm Eastern
Standard Time.

According to PoliTweet, the usage of Tweetdeck client application to spam politicians has been going on since July this year.

It added that it will publish more data on how the phenomenon was related to Malaysia’s #Merdeka55 event later.